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SOURCE: /mnt/d/GoogleDrive/Cercetasi/carti-camp-jocuri/100 Outstanding Summer Camp Program Ideas.pdf
CONVERTED: 2025-01-11
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--- PAGE 2 ---
THE COLLECTION
This collection of summer camp program ideas came from the submissions of three of our email
roundtables; “Best Programs”, “Best Things We Do At Camp“ and “Its a Hit!” These 100 pro-
gram ideas were chosen because they are unique, creative and most can be done at either a day
camp or resident (sleep-away) camp. These activities, programs and events were submitted by
directors and program directors from all over the world.
EMAIL ROUNDTABLES
Want to be part of future roundtables? Each month a new email roundtable is offered. Those on
the email list get notified and have a few days to submit their ideas on the given topic. In return
they are sent the complete compilation of everyones ideas. The ebooks are edited versions of
those roundtables. If you would like to participate in future email roundtable go to the home
page of SummerCampProgramDirector.com and sign-up to recieve email notifications.
--- PAGE 3 ---
TABLE OF CONTENTS
1. DO-IT-YOURSELF WATERPARK .......................................1
2. KNOW YOUR CAMPER TRUTH CEREMONY ..........................2
3. THE WHEEL OF MISFORTUNE .......................................3
4. THE GUINNESS GAMES. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
5. KEY TO THE TREASURE .............................................4
6. MARK TWAIN DAYS .................................................4
7. TALENT/NO TALENT SHOW .........................................5
8. ROCK THROWING AREA ............................................6
9. BEAD TRADE-IN ....................................................7
10. OUR CAMPS GOT TALENT ..........................................7
11. WESTERN NIGHT ...................................................8
12. PAY IT FORWARD ...................................................8
13. THE SPIRIT OF CAMP - CAMPFIRE ....................................9
14. HARRY POTTER WEEK .............................................10
15. MINUTE TO WIN IT STATIONS ......................................10
16. CHANGE THE WORLD .............................................10
17. SUPER SECRET GUEST ..............................................11
18. SUPER COOL VEHICLE DAY .........................................11
19. YOUTH FITNESS ...................................................12
20. BUTTON TRADING .................................................13
21. ICE WATER DAY STATIONS. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
22. MYSTERY TRIP .....................................................14
23. THEMED TRAILS ................................................... 15
24. TREE IDENTIFICATION .............................................16
25. MOVIE QUOTE SCAVENGER HUNT .................................17
26. TRICK AND TREAT NIGHT ..........................................17
27. CREATING CAMP MAGIC ...........................................18
28. THROUGH THE AGES ..............................................19
29. MISSION PROJECTS ................................................20
30. KINGDOM KATASTROPHE ..........................................20
31. CAKE WARS .......................................................21
32. BUZZWORD .......................................................23
33. FIRST TIME COLOR WAR ............................................23
34. CHAOS ............................................................25
35. REVERSE SCAVENGER HUNT .......................................25
36. HIT LIST ...........................................................27
37. CARDBOARD BOAT REGATTA ......................................27
38. CARNIVAL ANSWERING MACHINE .................................29
39. ALICE IN WONDERLAND / UN-BIRTHDAY PARTY ....................29
40. PANDEMIC - CAMP WIDE GAME ....................................31
41. SMORE BAKE-OFF .................................................32
42. SKILLS NIGHT .....................................................33
43. HARRY POTTER BREAKFAST ........................................33
44. ROTATION CELEBRATION ..........................................34
--- PAGE 4 ---
45. COLOR OLYMPIC THEME WEEK ....................................35
46. AMAZING RACE AT CAMP .........................................35
47. ADVENTURE CHALLENGE .........................................36
48. MIDNIGHT MADNESS ..............................................36
49. HOUSE POINTS ....................................................37
50. RED CARPET EVENT ...............................................38
51. SAFARI HUNT .....................................................39
52. THEMED MEALS ...................................................39
53. THE AVENGERS EVENING ACTIVITY ................................40
54. HOLIDAZE CELEBRATIONS .........................................41
55. MAGGOT ART .....................................................42
56. WALKING TACOS ..................................................43
57. BEAD REWARD PROGRAM .........................................43
58. THE HUNGRY GAMES ..............................................44
59. WISHBOAT CEREMONY ............................................44
60. IM A CELEBRITY...GET ME OUT OF HERE ............................45
61. OLD TIME OLYMPICS ...............................................45
62. TEACHABLE MOMENT ............................................46
63. KINDNESS TICKETS ................................................46
64. SCOOTER TOWN USA ..............................................47
65. AROUND THE WORLD DAY .........................................47
66. PHOTOGRAPHY CAMP .............................................48
67. DANCING WITH THE ALL-STARS ...................................48
68. PANIC ........................................... ..................49
69. BATTLE OF THE SUPER STARS ......................................50
70. WHERES WALDO? .................................................51
71. FICTIONAL COUNTRIES - OLYMPICS ................................51
72. SUNNY SMORES ...................................................52
73. GETTING TO KNOW YOUR COUNSELOR ............................52
74. A BETTER CAMPOUT ...............................................52
75. CHOOSE YOUR OWN ADVENTURE TUESDAY ........................ 54
76. SILENT MEAL ......................................................54
77. MISSION IMPOSSIBLE ..............................................55
78. STAFF PROJECTS ...................................................55
79. REDNECK DINNER .................................................56
80. HOMEMADE ICE CREAM IN A BAG .................................56
81. BLACK LIGHT PARTY ............................................... 57
82. MAKING FAKE SNOT ...............................................57
83. THE BIG APPLE DAY ........... .....................................58
84. COW TONGUE COMPETITIONS .....................................59
85. CHRISTMAS CARDS ................................................59
86. INTRODUCING CAMP NAMES ......................................60
87. GIANT GAME OF LIFE ..............................................60
88. STAFF RECOGNITION ..............................................61
89. THE CIVILIZED DINNER ...................... ......................61
90. CHRISTMAS IN JULY ...............................................62
91. MODERN ART NIGHT ..............................................63
--- PAGE 5 ---
92. BEACH THEME ....................................................63
93. WERE ALL GOING M.A.D. ..........................................64
94. SURVIVOR THEME .................................................65
95. EMBERS: WISH-SURPRISE-WONDER .................................67
96. ZOMBIE RAID - CAMP WIDE GAME .................................69
97. GAMES FOR A SUPERHEROES THEME ..............................71
98. IDEAS FOR A WILD WEST THEME ...................................74
99. KIDS SWAP MEET ..................................................79
100. THE PROPOSAL .................................................... 80
--- PAGE 6 ---
DO-IT-YOURSELF WATER PARK
Its all the rage to build a water park at your camp these days. But if you do the research (like
borrow a kid and go to a municipal water park), youll find that kids get bored VERY quickly
because even those things that are supposed to be “interactive” are very limited in creative
play. So a lot of running, no making of new friends. And if youve priced one, youll find that
they are NOT as much cheaper than a pool as you would think.
When YOU were a kid and it got really hot outside, you went to the garage and grabbed every
piece of hose and every kind of sprinkler you could find and set them up in the yard. What a
blast!
Thats the best thing you can do for CAMP, too.
Give a couple creative and “cheap” counselors $200 to go to Walmart and buy a bunch of
inexpensive hoses, manifolds (those things that let 4 hoses hook to one faucet), and a bunch of
different sprinklers: wave, rotary, perforated hose, ffft-ffft-ffft-rotating, ring. Whatever. A few
plastic “grips” so they can be clamped to an old stepladder, a chair, etc. And then pick a spot
that needs watering.
What you spend on water will be less than what youd spend on electricity and chlorine. You
move the location so different grass gets watered every day.
With the first group of campers you say, “Rats! Look at all this stuff! (pointing at box of hoses
and sprinklers). This was all suppose to be put together so that you could cool off. Oh well, I
guess well just have to come back tomorrow.”
Of course at least one kid will say, “WE could do it!”
Rubbing your chin, you say, “I dont know, do you think youre smart enough to figure out how
to use every one of these things at the SAME TIME?”
And away you go! Let them know youll turn the water “on” and “off” every 10 minutes so
that they WANT to re-arrange it when its “off” to create something new. AMAZING fun and
creativity and teamwork! They put it away at the end of the day and start fresh tomorrow!
WANT EVEN MORE FUN?!
Get some ½” PVC pipe (the white stuff
that glues/screws together) and have them
create their own water-park spray features.
With a cordless drill and a 3/32” bit they
can drill patterns of holes in a 10 section of
pipe to create a wave, a dragon, an obstacle
course… you can even set it along the
gutter in your pool to create more fun in the
shallow end! (In the “irrigation” section of
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your Home Depot / Lowes / Menards youll find the connector for a “3/4 hose fitting to the ¾”
pipe thread” for the ½” PVC (interior dimension) pipe.
Some of the camps Ive worked with have let the kids use short hack-saws and vices to cut their
own pipe and use gloves to glue them. Others cut a variety of lengths ahead of time and glued
pipe-thread fittings on each end so they can be assembled and disassembled by the kids (a little
more expensive, but YEARS of fun for not much money). (If youre even smarter, ask for some
dads to volunteer to make the parts. Every guy is looking for a reason to go to Home Depot and
spend $20 on something their kid will love!)
“We dont have grass.” Then get a piece of indoor-outdoor carpet (el-cheapo grass color is fine)
and do it on asphalt.
Be sure to take some photos of kids working together connecting everything! Next year you
wont want a spray park any more, youll want EVEN MORE hose!
KNOW YOUR CAMPER TRUTH CEREMONY
One thing that I have done with my day camp is having a “know your camper truth ceremony.”
1. Spend the first half-hour making one or two friendship brace-
lets.
2. Next wed gather around our group space (classroom, flag
pole, etc) and introduce the activity.
3. Wed then go around and play the game Two Truths & a Lie.
The game is exactly how it sounds. Each person would say to
truths and one lie and theyd have to guess the lie.
4. After that we would have hobos or other snacks to keep our
spirits up.
5. Then we would do a variety of small group team building
activities.
6. Next we would do a trivia sort of game where each camper
would come up with facts about the others and we would
guess who theyre talking about. The counselors are also involved in the game!
7. Finally we would hand out our friendship bracelets to one or two different people. The
only catch was that everyone had to end up with at least one bracelet.
The goal of the activity is two-fold: first to get to know the campers and staff and to make
everyone “feel good” because theyll end up with at least one new friend.
We tried it one time last year and it seemed to work fairly well. We did it during the last week of
camp. Perhaps this summer well do it two or three times throughout the summer.
100 Outstanding Summer Camp Program Ideas 2
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THE WHEEL OF MISFORTUNE
For every three letters a camper gets, they have to sing, but for a package, they get to spin the
Wheel of Misfortune. If they get two packages in one day, they still only spin it once.
Spaces on the wheel are things like:
• no chair (at the dining hall for entire cabin at next meal)
• no silverware (same as previous)
• kiss Bucky (camp deer head on dining hall wall)
• dunk tank (three shots in counselor in tank)
• firing squad (water balloons at camper that spun)
• chicken space (act like a chicken for 30 seconds)
• free candy
• polar bear swim (whole cabin gets early swim time)
• kitchen raid (prearranged chance for cabin to eat some leftovers)
• pie in the face
• ring the chapel bell
• ride in directors golf cart
Mail Call has become an event and yes it takes a long time this way, BUT the campers look
forward to spinning the wheel every year and dont seem to mind waiting in the sometimes 75
person long line. We get them through as fast as possible.
THE GUINNESS GAMES
We have been doing this since 2000 For junior high campers only.
Campers are able to set and break any record they want as long as its witnessed by a staff
member. We have a form that they fill out and turn in at the office. We then record and post the
records so others can have the opportunity to break them.
Over the years we have had to “ban” food records because they got to be wasteful and just
disgusting. Some records we have include (there are hundreds of records now!!!):
• longest time not talking at camp
• longest time wearing a life jacket
• longest time tapping nose
• longest time banging head on a #3 Frisbee golf sign
• most free throws
• most t-shirts worn at one time
• longest time underwater
• most shoes brought to camp
• tallest junior high camper
• fastest time from dining hall to chapel running
This works great with junior high because they are able to do the records themselves without
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help. The younger campers would need too much supervision and the high school campers are
just way too cool to do something like this. This is a GREAT USE for junior high dorky energy.
They LOVE IT! We have been doing it so long that now some of our counselors still hold records
from when they were junior highers and their campers are trying to break them! So fun!!!
KEY TO THE TREASURE
We have an award system at camp to keep the cabins excited and participating in all activities.
Keys are awarded to cabins for different activities, challenges and events. For example:
• first cabin to an activity gets a key
• cabin who wins a game gets a key
• cabin that does something helpful gets a key
We have a large chest with a chain and a lock on it. At the end of the week we play the mission
impossible theme music and let the cabins come up and try their keys in the locks. The cabin that
is able to open the lock, wins a chest full of goodies!
MARK TWAIN DAYS
When we held this theme we had 8 units of approx. 36-40 girls each.
FIND THE PIE
During the week the girls were responsible for finding a pie (made from paper mache and
painted) like the ones Aunt Polly placed on the window ledge to cool, in one of the units that
had to be hidden in plain sight. The trick is to do it when no one is looking, then write your unit
name on the underneath side each time you had it.
This was a fun, ongoing activity for the week of day camp but on the one overnight, we had the
competitions, i.e.
FENCE WHITE-WASHING
We had some materials donated from Home Depot to make 8 short picket fence panels about 2
wide and 4 tall. We staked these into the ground for stability. During the event the girls had to
use fly swatters for paint brushes and race to brush a mixture of white paint and water about 1:3
onto the panels to see how much of the panel they could cover in a minutes time. They also wore
the disposable rain ponchos that you can get 2/$1 at Dollar Tree.
FROG JUMP RACE
We had 8 frogs indigenous to the area so they could be released into the creek area after camp.
The frogs were lined up and the girls had to prompt the frogs, without touching them, to reach
100 Outstanding Summer Camp Program Ideas 4
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a finish line. Just know, frogs dont really cooperate well but it was a great laugh.
MINI-RAFT BUILDING
Each unit was given materials at the beginning of the week to build a raft by lashing. The materials
were six 1/2” dowel rods approx. 6 inches long and twine or jute was used for rope. During the
competition we had a molded pool of water to see which ones floated and which didnt.
Of course they all floated but it was a great way to hone their skills and fun to see how each unit
decorated their raft. Some were pretty elaborate.
PIE EATING CONTEST
The “Pie Eating Contest” was fun which involved the unit leaders (adults). The pies were thawed
crusts in tin pans filled with pudding and topped with whipped cream. We all know how a pie
eating contest works. Hands behind the back and go to it. The girls loved seeing their leaders a
mess and they were really good about cheering them on. Good sense of being a team.
3-LEGGED RACE
We found a Feed and Seed store that was
willing to donate burlap feed sacks which
we washed before hand.
AWARDS
Ribbons were given on the last day of
camp for the competitions and everyone
walked away with at least one ribbon
even if it was just a participation ribbon.
SPECIAL GUEST
We had a college student from a school
of thespians come in costume as Mark
Twain and tell the story of his life on the
river with Huck Finn and Joe. This was
their bedtime story after competitions to
settle them and they mightve learned
something along the way.
TALENT/NO TALENT SHOW
Talent Shows are pretty common, but since some people dont have GOOD talents they can
share like singing/dancing, we let people share their untalents as well.
We have a panel of judges who sit at the light table. (We drilled 4 holes in a table and, wired up
light bulbs to light switches on the tables). So when judges like a performance or are impressed
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by a performance, they light up their bulb.
At the end of the talent night, the judges converse and come up with Best Talent, Best No Talent,
Honorable Mentions. The no-talent performance usually add comedic relief. Weve had cabins
go up and eat a chocolate bar as their no-talent, do infomercials selling tap water, and horrible
singing performances.
We make it mandatory for all cabins to participate so we have enough acts to fill up the hour,
and some kids add in extra performances. There are also those who actually do have impressive
talents, as well.
ROCK THROWING AREA
One of favorite programs in our camp is our Rock Throwing Area.
We paint rocks about 1 inch in diameter different
colors. Each rock is worth a certain number of
points based on its color. We then set up different
targets for the boys to hit, or hoops to throw rocks
through, or different object to throw the rocks into
such as toy dump trucks or buckets. For every
target hit the boys earn the point based on the
color rock they thew. The boy with the most points
receives a prize.
This area is set up the same as an archery or
shooting range with a firing line and taped off area
all the way around. Sometimes the boys just want
to see what will make the loudest noise.
This has been very successful for us as our camp
is all boys(cub scouts) ages 7-10. We all know boys
love to throw rocks! It keeps them from picking
up rocks in other areas knowing they will have the
opportunity to do it safely. The boys also receive
points for the number of rocks they return to the
bucket after throwing (they dont even realize they
are just cleaning up after themselves).
100 Outstanding Summer Camp Program Ideas 6
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BEAD TRADE-IN
I just implemented the bead reward system. The kids have responded terrifically. We are a
church related daycare camp, so we added in “fruits of the spirit” for kids that show kindness,
self control, joy, etc.
They earn common beads for showing up and everyday behavior, silver and “gold” beads for
being good friends, rare beads and ultra rare beads for exceptional behavior.
They can trade in 10 common beads for a rare bead. I am the director and the kids cant wait to
show me how many they earned in the morning or afternoon.
OUR CAMPS GOT TALENT
This is the event of the summer for the kids. We start putting this in the newsletter at least two
weeks before.
JUDGES STAND
Appoint three counselors to be the judges. Let them sit by a long square table and face the stage
( **Give them a big cup that says “Coke”)
RED CARPET
A few years ago we made a red carpet, it took us a
few hours but now we have it for every year. Roll
out a long sheet of butcher paper, and use a paint
roller (like what you would use for a wall) to paint
it red. Leave it over night. The next morning set up
the chairs in isles and put the red carpet in between.
OTHER DETAILS
• Assign a Photographer
• Name Tags for all kids singing
• Prizes for winners
• Assign an MC and a DJ when the children fill out the form they should specify if they
are going to need music if yes. Be sure to have them all in order ready to go so you have
a smooth event.
As each child comes up put on some music and flash the lights!! The MC will introduce them
and say what theyre doing.
We did not let the judges give their opinions at the end of each childs performance as there are
a lot of children to go through and it would take too long. (This is a nice idea though if you do
not have a lot of children participating).
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At the end each child should get an award. We use a plastic medal that looks really cute and you
could pick it up from the dollar store. The winner and runner up should get a prize!
WESTERN NIGHT
The campers rotate throughout the evening so no two groups are at the same station...
STATION ONE: ROUND-UP
We had a gentleman teach the campers how to lasso....they then
took turns trying to lasso the horn on a saddle...ribbons were
given at the end of the evening for those who were successful
with the least attempts.
STATION TWO: RODEO
This was an obstacle course relay....barrels were set up....large
tunnels (opened ended barrels) were put in different places,
bales of hay to climb over..., etc...the team with the fastest time
received ribbons at the end of the evening.
STATION THREE: HORSES
We had local horse ranchers bring in their riding horses and
we set up an area where the campers could ride the horses in a
circle path...counselors lead the horses.
STATION FOUR: CAMPFIRE
We incorporated the evening snack in our western line-up....the
campers made and ate smores at this station.
FINALE
A professional line-dance caller taught the campers a few line-dances to some great country
music.
PAY IT FORWARD
The concept of paying it forward....each child takes upon himself to do three good deeds to
others within camp. I do for someone else and someone else “pays it forward”. This can be done
within an individual bunk/ an entire division/ whole camp.
Children learn that by giving, they receive and are a huge part of others lives. One kind word,
helping a friend, cheering on another, its endless and ongoing and can impact their entire
lifetime. Children can create cards to pass on and it cycles throughout the camp.
100 Outstanding Summer Camp Program Ideas 8
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This program is great!! It is creative as well and the opportunities for the children is fantastic!!
There is the movie Pay it Forward- however I would recommend it only for the counselors to see
so they grasp the idea and pay it forward as well.
THE SPIRIT OF CAMP - CAMPFIRE
Our best program is most definitely closing camp fire on the last night of camp.
This is not your typical camp fire. This is much more of a closing camp reflective ceremony. It
begins with a tiki torch lit path towards the camp fire. This walk is done by cabin and campers
and staff walk in silently. One the way to their seats each staff member receives a candle.
All campers and staff are in their seats at the camp fire except for 4 staff members who are
positioned with an unlit tiki torch around the campfire, as if they are representing a compass.
Each of the 4 compass points represent the following (as we are a Y camp): Spirit, Mind, Body,
Community.
The person representing Spirit begins with an illustration (story, song, poem) that represents
camp spirit. After they have completed their 3 minute illustration they pass the flame by lighting
the person representing “mind” torch. This process continues through all 4.
After all 4 have shared, the camp director then instructs the 4
compass points to share their flame by lighting the candle of
another staff member and the flame is passed until all candles
are lit. A deep reflective talk is given about this process
representing camp spirit and our need to pass it.
We also have campers look into the flame and reflect on the
following: Who made it possible for you to come to camp?
reflect on the new things you tried that you were scared to do?
Reflect on all the new friends that you made.
After this, half of the staff members are instructed to blow out their candles. The speakers says,
“think of how much different your week at camp would be if these staff members had not been
here.” Then the candles are re-lit and the brightness returns to the darkness.
A period of reflective songs are song and campers quietly dismissed.
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HARRY POTTER WEEK
Our best program is the Harry Potter week. First, we sort the kids into their houses. Then some
of the kids begin to create the house flags (which are huge). The art room is full at this time. We
also have an odd sock contest. Then we play Quidditch and the counselors get into full roles and
garb. The feast is made of the house colors on the tables, balloons and flags. The counselors sit
at the head tables and some younger counselor serve the kids.
Food served is cream soda and butter, mud pie with gummy worms, mini dogs, jello with eyes
balls, and whatever the staff comes up with. The kids love it!!!!
MINUTE TO WIN IT STATIONS
For a camp wide activity we did our version of Minute to Win It. We had
different stations set up around camp with various activities from the
television show. Groups rotate through the stations. At each station we
provide an explanation of the activity they are to perform just as they do
on the tv show. At each station a different member of the group tries the
activity so that each kid gets at least one chance to participate.
It is a very fun activity to do that provides a lot of entertainment. You can keep score by giving a
point if they can do the activity and have a prize at the end or you can just do it for fun.
CHANGE THE WORLD
Today I Am Going to Try to Change the World is something I did last year in my devotions
program. In the morning we listened to Johnny Reids song “Today I Am Going to Try to Change
the World” and in my program I read “If I Could Change the World I Would” from the Chicken
Soup for the Kids Soul book.
The kids then were to think of how they would change the world if they could. They then wrote
it on a index card or drew a picture. At the end of the program I read them allowed so that they
would know what their fellow campers would do to change the world.
At the back of the lodge I had a big world with the words Today I am Going to Try to Change
the World. I hung their cards up around it for them to read and think about.
It is a rewarding a meaningful program for not only the campers but for the staff and the
counselors as well.
100 Outstanding Summer Camp Program Ideas 10
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SUPER SECRET GUEST
Kinder programme (we have 4 year olds in daycamp)
Tell the kids we have a very special super secret guest coming to camp and we need to get ready
for them. Hint at who it might be throughout the programme.
WHERE WILL THE SUPER SECRET GUEST STAY?
Have kids dress up in construction gear (hard hats, fluorescent vests, workbelts, etc.). Get all
of your recycled boxes, styrofoam, plastic bottles, tarps, sheets, tape, etc. and build the special
guest a fort to sleep in. Next, have them decorate the fort.
WHAT WILL THE SUPER SECRET GUEST EAT?
If you have baking/ cooking facilities this would be a fun time to bake cupcakes or mini pizzas
or something. If not, its a great opportunity to make fabulous mud/ stick/ moss pies.
WHAT WILL THE SUPER SECRET GUEST DO?
Turn on music and play musical statues, make a conga line, get out puppets and make up a
puppet show (some form of entertainment for the super secret guest).
IMPOSTOR!
Have the super secret guest show up...but make it an impostor??? Have the impostor run off with
the cakes/ pizzas/ mudpies that were made for the super secret guest. Have the kids hunt down
the impostor and the cakes. Have the real super secret guest arrive in time to eat the mudpies
with the kids, and then watch their puppet show/ magic show/ dancing and move into the fort.
SUPER COOL VEHICLE DAY
We did a “Super Cool Vehicle Day” last summer and are waiting till next summer to do it again
because we want to keep it special.
We contacted business and agencies with cool vehicles and asked them
to come to camp for 4 hours. Some of the vehicles that came were:
• Huge 18 wheeler moving truck
• Snow Plow and Dump Truck from the County DOT
• A cement mixer (kids got huge brushes and could scrub
the truck). It was filled with water and the operator would
release some!
• Dumpster truck that picked up and put down our camp
dumpster
• Red Cross Disaster Relief Vehicle
• A limousine van
• A double Decker tour bus
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• A county Sheriffs car
• SWAT team vehicle
• Police motorcycle with side car
• K-9 Van with dog
• A sign companys cherry picker
• Fire Engine
• Ambulance
• State Police Car
• Mail Truck
• Supermarket 18 wheeler FREEZER truck (they brought rulers, crayons and insulated
lunch bags to hand out)
• And the best of all, the County Police sent a helicopter that landed while the entire
camp was at flag-pole in the morning.
The day was awesome- agencies and business were wonderful to work with it was a ton of
work to organize.
Total cost was less than $100 for cold water, ice pops and pizza that we gave to all the vehicle
operators.
YOUTH FITNESS
It incorporates general physical education principals
(stretching, exercise, movement) along with the
educational classroom component (teaching about
the food groups, eating healthy).
Each AM the kids receive their pedometers, before
they go home in the PM they record how many steps
they took for the day. At the end of the week - the
campers receive a certificate for the total number of
steps for the week!
We include line dancing, games for all ages and
abilities, jump-roping, obstacle courses, etc.
At the end of the week we have a large ceremony
celebrating the kids and their successes! Parents are invited to come and dance, eat healthy
snacks and celebrate with us!
This program runs for 1 week. The alternate week to this camp runs with doing fitness activities
in the AM and then we go to the pool after lunch for the afternoon. This camp is called Fit N
Swim.
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WILD WEST AUCTION
The biggest hit Ive had recently was a new addition to our already popular Wild, Wild, West
Day. As always, we had the campers go dig for gold in a nearby creek. Usually we just allow
them to turn their gold in for prizes, and thats that. The twist this year was that they could turn
in their gold for money this year at the “money changer booth.”
Once the campers had their money they were warned by “old-time 49ers” (a.k.a. counselors and
CITs) to save their money and not waste it away in “Boom Town” because greater riches might
await them later in the day.
The campers were then led to “Boom Town” which was located in our forest area but could
really be in any grassy field, etc. There were stations with hawkers everywhere trying to get
the campers to spend their money on rootbeer floats, cheap little prizes, a chance to shoot an
arrow at a bullseye, face-painting, enter into a raffle for a big prize, buy some little candies at the
“candy store”, a bag of popcorn, basically anyway to try to entice them to spend their money….
just like the ones who struck it rich in the old west. Many of the campers spent it all and had a
great time in “Boom Town.” Others saved their money for the hint of greater riches later in the
day. Either way, “Boom Town” was a wild, fun time for them all.
After Boom Town, the campers were led to our Hall where we had a stage, chairs and microphone
all set up like an auction house. They were really minimal decorations. We just did one big red
sign with “Auction House” on it. On Amazon I had bought a couple of great prizes (which really
werent that expensive, but better than the oriental trading prizes they were used to).
Some prizes:
• Various pool toys - alligator inflatable, orca whale inflatable (these were cheap but took
up a lot of space on stage and looked very impressive to the campers)
• Make-up kit
• T-shirt tie-dye kit
• Nerf guns
• Some of the bigger, nicer looking dollar tree toys
• One blow-up pool
We also had some “experience prizes”. For example:
• Push a counselor in the pool
• Popsicle party with a counselor of your choice
• Camp Director for the day
• Ride on the fire truck (next to fire station)
• Pizza for lunch, etc.
A spirited counselor was the auctioneer and each
camper had a paddle. We auctioned off all of the prizes
and the kids loved it! The ones who had their fun in
Boom Town took it with a laugh and the ones who had
saved money went into bidding wars. Overall, it was a
really fun addition to our Wild, Wild, West Day.
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BUTTON TRADING
We started button trading in 2013 and this was our 2nd year doing it. We have buttons (size 1.25)
for EVERYTHING. Staff, buildings, activities, favorite camp foods, inside camp jokes…literally
everything and more.
Campers collect them and wear them around a lanyard. Staff wear them on their staff name tag
lanyard. If a camper wants to trade with a staffer, the staffer MUST trade with them the one that
the camper wants.
It has been a HUGE addition to our camp culture and is actually
a pretty decent moneymaker as well in our camp store. We
sell the buttons for $1. We have a Monday Starter Pack Special
where they get 6 buttons and a lanyard for $6. Then after that,
every button is $1. The buttons are made for pennies once you
have the button maker.
We purchased our machine from American Button Machines.
I wondered how it would carry over for the 2nd year, but it
was great because all of the sudden we had “vintage” buttons
that were no longer being made that campers brought back.
We even had “immunity buttons.”
ICE WATER DAY STATIONS
Here are your options of games to play: The materials will be set up and you just rotate your
group along with you through the stations. You can go back to a station if desired. Towards the
end, after everyone has done all of the stations together, they can usually have some free play in
the water and whatever is left of the balloons. Just keep an eye on them. There will be a first aid
box outside as well. Make sure they go to the bathroom BEFORE water games. Try to limit the
number of inside wet traffic to avoid a soaked floor and slips!
ICE FISHING
• Divide into two teams
• Camper will stick his/her feet in a tub of ice and try to pick up marbles with toes.
• The one with the most - wins.
HAILSTORM
This is a team relay. One team is the storm throwing splash bombs soaked in ice water up in
the air. The other team tries to make it, one at a time,through the course with out hail damage
(getting hit). This works like an obstacle course. You can set up obstacles to run through.
ICE MELT
Each person gets a piece of ice and the goal is to melt it using their body (except their mouth).
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They must hold it somewhere and must be the first one to melt the cube completely.
SNOW BIRDS SKEET SHOOT
Using Slingshots Water bombs, one team is hunting and the other team is the flock of birds
trying not to get hit.
ICE TOSS
Divide into two teams. See how many pieces of ice can be tossed into a group of buckets one at a time in a
30 second period. Let each team choose one person at a time to hold the team bucket for them.
EXTRA ACTIVITIES
• Sprinklers
• Enjoy the water
• Bubbles
• Have fun
• Water balloons
Can play any variety of water balloon games or relays:
• Toss and step back
• Hold between your legs and run/waddle to the cone and back
• Over-under relay
• Stand in a circle and call a name and toss it (get really creative and assign a cartoon
name to each kid then call that name)
• Run down sit on a balloon in a chair to pop it Relay
MYSTERY TRIP
Our camp is a traveling summer camp-- which means we take a field trip every day. While
that sounds exciting, the campers (and staff) begin to get a little bit jaded towards the end of the
summer.
This summer we instituted a Mystery Trip. The trip was towards the end of the week, which
enabled me to give out clues in the days leading up to the trip.
For example, the older groups Mystery Trip was going to this really cool movie theater /
restaurant. Their first clue was a chicken (I had pre-ordered chicken fingers and French fries for
everyone). The second clue had something to do with a couch potato. Looking back, I wish I
had them play some sort of competition to EARN their clue. Definitely something to remember
for next summer.
No one in the entire camp knew where the Mystery Trips were. The campers and counselors had
all sorts of crazy ideas and theories-- even going as far as to predict what their next clue would
be, and what it could mean.
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By mid-week, everyone was very excited about the clues, their guesses and the whole mystery
idea. Parents were even stopping me in the hallway to ask questions-- and were shocked when
I wouldnt tell them!
THEMED TRAILS
I have been experimenting with themed trails at camp. I
find that many of our younger campers do not enjoy
hiking because they dislike the mosquitoes and
deer flies, or their parents have them terrified about
getting Lyme disease from ticks. I decided that it was
time to create a distraction.
“ANIMAL TRACKER” TRAIL
We attached animal track rubbing plates (from Nature
Watch), a laminated picture, and a few facts on each
animal to wooden signs. I then screwed the signs to metal fence posts, which were spaced along
the trail. Then, using animal track resins purchased from Nature Watch, I made tracks in cement,
painted them brown, and hid them along the path. The campers are given booklets and a crayon
for taking rubbings of the tracks, and then they have to find the footprints for that animal. The
campers walk eagerly to find the next post. Yet once they are there, they have to slow down to
take turns for the rubbing and for finding the animals prints. This forces them to stop and take
a look around them, often making other discoveries. At the end of the season, the signs and
footprints are collected and stored. This idea works great for our regular campers and for our
nature education program with visiting elementary schools.
Other ideas are as follows:
TREE IDENTIFICATION
Find a trail that has the most variety of trees along it. Place signs near the tree that needs to be
identified. See if they can find the trees seeds underneath the canopy. Campers can take leaf
and bark rubbings. One year I had my campers, take bark rubbings in a patchwork pattern on
a large sheet of paper. In the center of the paper, they wrote diamante poems about trees, and
then they framed them with bark of trees we had already cut down. They had something really
special to take home.
STORY TRAIL
Cut apart and laminate a book to make a story trail. They read the next page as they find it. My
favorite book for young campers is Dirt Boy by Erik Jon Slangerup. It is about a little boy who
is tired of being clean, runs off into the woods, and finds a giant. The book could change every
week.
FAIRY TRAIL
I picked out a trail that has fascinating stumps, unusual tree trunks and moss for the fairy trail.
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Campers construct homes, dishes, furniture, and paths for fairies out of natural materials they
find on the forest floor. Campers have fun walking along the trail to see what other campers
have done. I hang tinkling wind chimes out of sight. There are some really neat fairy rubbing
plates as well for them to collect.
AMPHIBIAN AND REPTILE TRAIL
We have some wetlands and two vernal pools on our property where campers love to catch
frogs. This trail leads to this area, and they learn about the creatures they will find along the way.
FOLKLORE TRAIL
Our campers have been making loads of forts in the woods. Sometimes, it is mysterious to walk
by these groupings of abandoned shelters. We build on to local tales and make up a few of our
own. Theres a tree where I hang percussion and chime type instruments for them to play as
background effects for some of the storytelling. I may use geocaches to hide the folklore tales for
this trail.
MOVIE QUOTE SCAVENGER HUNT
One big hit for us is our movie quote scavenger hunt. The kids start with a quote from a movie.
They have to figure out which movie the quote is from.
The title of the film is the clue to the next location. For example, their first clue was a quote from
the Lego Movie. When they figured out it was the lego movie, they knew where the next hint
would be in the Lego bin in the rec room. Then they got a quote from ...
• Frozen (freezer)
• Harry Potter (broom)
• Up (on the ceiling)
• Finding Nemo (on Australia on a world map)
• and finally with Willy Wonka which led to our candy stash.
The kids go through it quite quickly, but you can make it as hard or as easy as you need to, and they had
a blast.
TRICK AND TREAT NIGHT
We had a holiday theme. The thing the kids loved best was our trick-AND-treat night. We had
people set up all over camp with a small gift or candy for the kids. The kids were broken up into
small groups and each group was given a clue to their first destination. We made sure they all
got different clues so they all went to different destinations first.
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Once they reached their first destination, they were required to do a performance for the person
passing out their treat. They may have been made to sing a song, such as Mary Had a Little Lamb,
sing a song they learned at their campfire, say the Pledge, or recite their alphabet (something
each child would know). If its a church camp and theyve been learning verses all week, you
could have them recite a verse. Along with their treat, they are given their next clue.
CREATING CAMP MAGIC
One of the biggest changes that we made recently was adding
the “creating magical experiences” to our mission statement
for camp. Placing these three words in such a prominent place
allowed us to focus on being very intentional about it.
The challenge that we gave each and every counselor, and the
what we held them to by the way, was to each week have that
“one” moment that they did something for their campers that
was outside of the “norm.” It couldnt be an activity that we
already offer at camp. It had to be special, creative, and have a
surprise element to it.
Each staff meeting wed ask our counselors to report on if they
had completed their “magical moment” yet. To this day, I still
hear from parents, not about zip line or swimming or the great
evening programs, but about that thing the counselor did with
their cabin.
Here are a few magical moments that Ive seen our counselors create for their campers:
• Late night camp kitchen raids
• Bringing all of their sleeping bags and pillows to the flagpole before any arrived and
giving their appearance that they slept there all night
• Placing a huge blanket over their dining hall table and eating under the table as if
they were in a cave
• Nighttime camp store raid
• Organizing every cabin to surround my house at 5 a.m. and singing a song
• Driving to Dairy Queen on their time off to buy ice cream for their cabin
What are some of the ways your camp could do very little things that make a lasting impression?
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THROUGH THE AGES
We started a new week theme: Through the Ages
MONDAY - Caveman/woman
• Campers dressed up and “Bones” were awarded for the best dressed
Activities:
• Dino tracking—before camp started we stamped prints all over camp—some leading
places and others in dead ends
• A maze—best time wins
TUESDAY - Maidens and Knights
• Campers dresses up and a crown was awarded to best dressed.
• We had a fingers fest (no silverware used)—soup, campers stew and rolls—what a
mess!
Activities:
• Jousting—hula hoops hanging from trees—campers run and collect hoops on their
swords
WEDNESDAY - the 60s
• Tye Die galore
Activity:
• All campers tye dyed something
THURSDAY- the decade you were born
(this is also field trip day—no group activity)
FRIDAY - The Future!
• Dress as if it is 2099
Activities:
• Campers made time capsules for future campers.
• We had a time machine and past staff came back for the afternoon
There was a station race that went through each time period
1. Time machine to the caveman era—here campers had to create a “home” from various
materials (boxes, tubes, string—generally anything extra around camp) and former staff
judged it
2. Knights and maidens here the groups jousted again—it was so much fun they asked to
do it again—the twist this time—we had two electric kids cars and they rode them like a
horse to get the hoops
3. Decade you were born in- we had a dress your counselor with clothes that the campers
brought in for this event
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4. Create a robot camp groups had X time to create a robot from things they found around
camp—one group made their counselor into a robot (think outside the box)
MISSION PROJECTS
We have one mission camp each summer. The younger campers have to stay on site with me
during the mission projects, because many of the ministries we visit will not allow volunteers
under 13.
The guys help my husband with construction things and the girls do something crafty with me.
We have (tried) to crochet scarves for homeless ministries, weve (relatively successfully) made
diaper cakes for pregnancy care centers, and several other projects.
TOBOGANNS
This year a friend with a Romanian mission asked if we could make toboggans (beanies) to send
with her on a trip. Its been our most successful project yet!
Step 1: Collect fleece (search the bargain bin at the fabric store for months, hit up the clearance
blankets at Dollar General, ask for donations, etc.)
Step 2: Cut fleece and sew into tubes (or get a volunteer to do it at your annual camp workday).
Im not sure the measurement on these. The volunteer was much smarter than I and free
handed X, S, M, L, XL using various models (ahem, other volunteers) who were present
that day.
Step 3: (Enter teens) Have the teens cut strips about ¾ in. wide and 2+in. deep into one end of
the tubes. Notes: We eyeballed this. This is similar to how you make a tie together fleece
blanket.
Step 4: Tie the strips together at the top of the toboggan, fold/roll the edge at the bottom of the
toboggan. Viola!
We also used knitting looms to make toboggans out of yarn. A few of the teens enjoyed this,
but the fleece thing was on everybodys skill level and they all enjoyed it. We even had a special
needs teen that did very well with this project despite challenges in the past.
KINGDOM KATASTROPHE
KINGDOM KATASTROPHE - A Medieval-Themed Counselor Hunt
This summer (as we do every summer) we always program a theme related version of counselor
hunt into the schedule. I think the kids loved this one more than any other counselor hunt weve
ever done. It actually wasnt really a counselor hunt because the counselors werent hiding, but
this is what we did:
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1. All our counselors had a character for the summer and our program was broken down
into 2 kingdoms “battling” against each other for land domination. Each kingdom had a
king, a queen, prince, princess, knights, townspeople, etc.
2. The counselor had all “lost” a part of their costume/outfit (played it into a storyline) and
needed help finding it. They hid their items and then thought of their own clues as to
where to find it.
3. The campers would find a character and ask them, “What did you lose?” Then the character
would give the first clue, “All I remember when I had it last, I could hear running water.”
The first 15 minutes of the game, campers were going around getting all the first clues
that they could get. The clues were not very revealing.
4. At the 15 minute mark, the siren would sound to signify the second clue could be acquired.
So the process began again...the 2nd clues were a little more revealing. Many items were
found after the 2nd clue. And at the 25 min. mark, the siren would sound again and the
third and final clue would be revealed by the characters when it was asked of them. This
clue was very revealing and all items would be found quickly after this siren.
5. When an item was found, the campers would have to return it back to the character then
bring the character to the program staff to receive their points. Kings were worth 5 pts.,
Queens 4pts., Prince and princess 3pts., and so on.
The points were shown to all in the slide show prior to the game. (pictures below)
This is a very visually appealing game, with counselors all in costume and kids moving all
over the property. It created a great atmosphere, even for bystanders. The teen campers loved
this game as well. Im not sure why this version was a hit more than other years, but the kids
absolutely loved it. And it could be done with any theme, any characters created. Kids just love
looking for stuff!
CAKE WARS
Campers were broken into groups of 4 with a CIT to help them. I had the lead counselors giving
direction. Our elective time during the day is 10:30am-12pm for the 5 days. My original thought
was to have the campers make/bake the cakes day one and decorate the cakes Tues-Thurs and
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be judged Friday. As it came closer I realized that would take way too long.
I called local grocery stores and tried to order sheet cakes undecorated. They all would charge
me $25-$30 for a ¼ sheet cake. Too expensive!
I decided each group needed:
• 2 - 9X13 cakes
• 2 - 9” round cakes
• 1 9” square cake
I went to the local Dollar store and bought the pans. I bought store brand white cake mixes for
about $2 each. (They are not eating these cakes so it doesnt matter how they taste.)
I made the cakes at my house the weekend before the elective started. Let them cool and didnt
cover them, kind of wanted them to get stale.
I bought:
• store brand white frosting
• craft store fondant
• craft store fondant dye
• craft store fondant rollers - 1 for each group (Walmart/AC Moore)
• in the cake decorating section they have cardboard cake platters for the cake to be
decorated on
DAY 1
I sat all campers down and explained we were in a cake battle to be displayed and judged Friday
by all campers. Our theme for that week was Safari Week (the other week was Under the Sea).
We broke them into teams, explained how to use the fondant (Google it), how to dye fondant,
and how to use the store frosting as a base before the fondant. Then I gave them a piece of paper
to design their creations before starting to decorate. Then I gave them their cakes. We used
plastic knives and they cut/created the base of their cakes. DONT cover the cakes with plastic
wrap. I just took paper table cover and put it over them.
DAY 2-4
The groups learned to work with the fondant, crated figures, rolled it out and decorated the
cakes. Most were done by Thursday. Some needed the finishing touches on Friday (early).
DAY 5
Friday The cakes went out to be judged. Each camper got one ticket to put in the box of the
cake they liked the best. We took the count and gave certificates at the ending of the day at flag
pole. I also brought in cupcakes for them to decorate and EAT!
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BUZZWORD
The one thing I did last summer that was a hit (well actually, it was responsible for creating
many hits) was coming up with a “buzzword” for evaluating the quality of activity planning.
Our buzzword was “EPIC”:
Exciting, elaborate
Phenomenal, priceless
Incredible, innovative
Creative, climactic
We taught the EPIC concept during staff training and
did some exercises in which we took existing camp
activities from previous years and discussed how to
make them more EPIC. We outlined how an EPIC
program will engage all of the campers senses and
leave them wanting more.
Of course, not every activity can be totally EPIC, or it would lose its effect. Its important to
choose those special moments when an EPIC experience will make the most impact on your
campers. The best (but not only) times for an EPIC experience are on the FIRST and LAST day
of a session (week). We called this the EPIC SANDWICH.
The EPIC concept really made a huge impact on our programming. We have always been really
GOOD programmers, but this summer we had many more WOW moments. It amazed me how
it made a difference at every level, from our counselors who plan activities for their cabins rest
time after lunch, to our programmers who plan and execute the majority of our programming,
to senior staff in charge of special events.
I saw a first-year counselor who stole all her mothers extra bedsheets from home so her cabin
could build one GIANT blanket fort. I also saw a senior staff member who staged a “discovery”
of a pirate chest (as a set-up for the following days colour war) that was so convincing that
campers were sure it was real.
Part of what I think made this so successful was that we boiled a concept down to a single
word, taught what that word meant to us, and then referred to it consistently in all of our
training, weekly meetings, and evaluations. It made it extremely easy for our staff to know and
understand what was expected, and this is something I am going to look at again in preparation
for this summer. Im sure that there are other parts of our training that we could simplify greatly
by creating an appropriate buzzword.
FIRST TIME COLOR WAR
Here is what we tried after participating in the Color Wars Round Table. I was very interested in
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doing a Color War theme for one of our weeks in camp and it was awesome!
We dedicated an entire week to the event and did a number of things to make it fun for all age
groups.
We kicked it off on Monday as we start the camp in our theater with the division of teams. We
did this by placing color tabs under their seats that they were not aware of until we told them to
take a look. We also tied our Color War to the Star Wars theme and played the theme song on the
way into the theater. We had ordered special camper shirts in red, blue, yellow and green and
assigned all high school counselors to teams as well. The college staff were given Black t-shirts
with Jedi Counselor on the back which they loved.
On Monday the teams were given one hour together to come up with a team name, hand
out shirts and create a team cheer. We met back in the theater to award our first points of the
competition. The kids loved it and really got into the week. We are a day camp and were getting
more and more drop-ins for the week then we have ever in the past.
Each day we started in the theater with a crazy challenge and on the first day it was the cola in a
can drank through another contestants sock! Obviously we used high school counselors for this
event and they got into it big time. The kids were cheering and everyone had a great time. At the
end of the day Color War was all they were talking about with their parents!
As the week progressed we continued with crazy challenges and we made sure each age group
had appropriate challenges that they could accomplish. Here are some examples: for the 4-5
girls we did a coloring challenge, the 4-5 boys we did a big wheels race, 6-7 girls did a friendship
bracelet challenge. There were great activities the entire week.
We ended the week with a wrap-up of the Great Race. An entire age group race that I read about
in the Color Wars roundtable that took over an hour to run but was awesome. We filmed a lot of
it and showed the clips that afternoon to the kids at the awards ceremony.
THINGS TO IMPROVE
Film more of the events during the week, order more t-shirts for drop-ins so they immediately
feel a part, definitely center on a theme, Start wars was great. Find a more clever way to designate
teams. They will be looking for the tabs next year. Also, DEFINITELY keep siblings on the same
team. This was mentioned last year and to be honest I shrugged it off and thought it would not
matter…. It matters!
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CHAOS
This summer during staff training we had all of our staff take a part of CHAOS. (This idea we
learned about through an ACA conference, though I cannot remember who is owed the credit.)
CHAOS stands for...
Counselors
Have
Awesome
Outstanding
Skills.
For this activity each counselor or staff member thinks about something that they enjoy and are
good at. They then think about ways in which they can adapt this skill or talent to camp life as
well as how they can present it to the other staff in 15 minutes. (Example: one of my staff enjoyed
beading, so she created a life-size loom and demonstrated the skill for us using large noodles and
ropes, creating a very enjoyable demonstration and obstacle course. Another enjoyed learning
about body language, so she showed us some great ways to relax our minds and ways to quietly
and purposefully earn the attention of a group. And yet another impressed us with her talent
performing Step routines, and how we could easily get our campers engaged and attentive.)
This was an incredible opportunity for my staff to gain confidence in a setting that was new to
many of them. It not only gave them practice teaching but also helped them realize that they all
had something different to bring to the table. This activity allowed them to see value in learning
from each other and to respect each other.
I had the staff prepare for their skill demonstration and then throughout staff training we broke
up the loads of information with 1-3 presentations by staff members (which was a big hit!).
Though I cannot take credit for the idea, I believe that implementing CHAOS into our staff
training allowed my staff to grow in immeasurable ways, to see that they each had something
to offer as well as develop a strong culture of acceptance and community. Not only that but it
gave them more examples and resources of activities that they then could use with our campers.
REVERSE SCAVENGER HUNT
At camp we play a game called the, “Reverse Scavenger Hunt”
Here is how we play:
1. After dinner, keep cabins at their dining table. Explain to cabins that they will have 20
minutes to head back to their cabin. They will pick one sleeping bag and put everything
they think will be on the scavenger hunt list. Then bring sleeping bag back to the lodge.
2. Once each cabin is back, explain to cabins that we will review each item on the list. Each
item has a different point value. The girl cabin and boy cabin that has the most points,
wins a prize.
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3. Only items that came into the lodge inside the sleeping bag counts.
4. We also explain that everyone in their cabin can search through the sleeping bag for
the specified item, but only the counselor may present the item to their specified judge
(director). If there is an item that is borderline, then the judges will confer and come to a
decision.
5. Tally up the points and see who wins.
Here is a sample list of random items from a previous year at camp. It changes each year. Some
items are subjective enough that anything may work.
Points Item
10 Bandana
10 Camp log
10 Candy
10 Dental Floss
10 Dirty sock
10 Hat
10 Left handed hammer
10 Pajamas
10 Piece of clothing with pink on it
10 Pinecone
10 Rock
10 Shoe
10 Something that has camouflage on it
10 Glasses
10 Kilt
10 Toolbelt
10 Toothpaste
10 Water bottle
20 Leftovers from tonights dinner
50 A piece of the creek running through camp
50 Anything with stripes on it
50 Anything with tye dye
50 Baby bottle
50 Camp song book
50 Cowboy hat
50 Missing assignments from school
50 Poncho
50 Something that you can use to start a fire with
50 Something you can use as an instrument
50 Stuffed animal
50 Tail light fluid
100 Wedding ring
100 Cabin flag
100 Eye patch
100 Pillow
100 Something that would work as a beard
100 The most embarrassing thing you have
100 The smelliest thing you have
100 Welding mask
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150 Anything that has YMCA on it
150 Dirty underwear
150 12th man flag
400 100 points each: Authentic Signature of Husky, Buttercup or Scuttle
500 Cash
1000 Anything with Seattle Seahawks on it
1000 Anything with Seattle Mariners on it
1000 Picture of your family
1000 Something that is older than dirt
1000 The most awkward thing you have
1000 The most random thing you have
1000 The scariest thing you have
10000 Total Points
HIT LIST
We decided to try a game that is ongoing for a whole week. Other camps have many names for
this game but we call it Hit List. Our campers loved it!
Mechanics:
• Each camper is given the name of one other camper as their target. You have to try and
get your target out.
• Each camper is given a small styrofoam ball. Anything small and light will work though.
• To get your target out you have to hit your target anywhere on the torso with the styrofoam
ball.
• Once a successful hit is made, they report it.
• The camper who was hit is out of the game, and the camper who made the hit is given a
new target. Basically the target of the eliminated camper becomes the new target for the
camper that made the hit.
Its important to set boundaries and times when the game is on and off. For us, the game is off
in the dining hall, swimming pool area, main hall, and while activities/classes are ongoing.
Basically its on mostly during travel times when kids are walking around from place to place or
free time. You play until theres one camper left who wins the game.
It took one week for the game to be completed, and we gave out a big prize for the winner. The
campers loved it and wanted to restart a new game after it finished.
CARDBOARD BOAT REGATTA
We did a card board boat Ragtta, and oh man was it a hit! Our teen campers made the boats, and
they were divided in teams based on their color war color. Then the younger campers that were
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on the same color war team, got to watch, cheer and support their teen boat team. It turned out
great!
Teens were given the same about of basic supplies: Cardboard boxes, duct tape and markers (we
did not allow paint because they race would be held in our pool). They were told they could
bring any recycled materials from home to use on the boat however, if they brought something
then it HAD to go on the boat. So they had to have a plan.
We gave them one day to plan out and design their boat on paper. Then they had two days to
construct the boats. They also had to create a paddle if they remembered that they needed one.
On the day of the race they all brought their boats to the lap pool. Each team had to pick a
captain of their boat who would ride in the boat and paddle in the race to the other side. It was
great fun and all the boats made it.
Please be sure and practice safety first - we had lifeguards on both sides of the pool and one in
the water, plus each captain wore a life jacket.
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CARNIVAL ANSWERING MACHINE
We build an “Answering Machine” from a large table covered in bright paper for our weekly
carnival. There is a slot cut into the paper on the front that is reinforced with another layer of
paper around it. A sheet of paper is taped on the back of the slot from inside the machine. Small
pieces of paper and bright felts are provided for campers to write questions on and slip into the
Answering Machine. An answer is fed out the same slot.
What the campers dont know at first is that a person is inside the machine (under the table)
providing the answers. Younger campers are the best with this activity as they dont try to figure
out “who” is in the machine but just take great joy in receiving their answers and thinking up
new questions. One volunteer needs to staff the machine on the outside, helping campers think
of questions and / or writing their questions for them. The person inside benefits from hearing
the conversations going on outside and can use that info to answer the questions.
The sillier the questions and answers the better. Dont try to give true answers, arbitrary and
bizarre answers are often most appreciated! Answers that refer to funny things that happened at
camp that week are great too. The machine takes on a personality of its own.
Caution: make sure the paper surrounding the table is secure and peek-proof, the fun depends
on the suspension of belief and one glimpse of the person under the table ruins that instantly.
The person on the outside must guard the paper sides from being ruined and keep campers
from peeking in the slot. Provide the person under the table with some fun candy, a drink, a
pillow or cushion and lots of pens. Sound effects are good, but you may need another person or
a recording to provide those as the answering machine can get very busy! We place the machine
nearly against a wall so that the back side of it can be entirely open to the air as it gets hot inside!
Some campers will spend nearly their whole time at the answering machine!
ALICE IN WONDERLAND / UN-BIRTHDAY PARTY
We had a few different stations for this themed afternoon. First, we gave our kids a letter from
Alice asking for the kids to help her on her way through Wonderland. Our kids were sent to
Alice by the water (Alice - our staff member was
dressed in a blue dress and it just so happened that
she had blonde hair as well, so she really looked
the part), their task as a group was that they had
to create the best bubble snake.
BUBBLE SNAKE (CATERPILLAR)
To create the bubble snake, in advance I cut off
the bottom 1/4 of plastic water bottles, I then got
a handful of elastic bands, 1 cloth per bottle and
created a soap and water mixture. Once the kids
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reached their location they had to put all the things together to make the bubble snake.
They took the cloth and put it on the bottom of the bottle (which you have already cut out), make
sure the cloth is only one layer and is secured firmly with an elastic band around it. Once it is all
put together you dip the bottle cloth end in to the soap/water mixture, you then blow through
the mouth piece and a bubble snake emerges from the cloth (you can add extra fun by adding a
few drops of food coloring to the cloth itself to create a rainbow effect). - http://www.wikihow.
com/Make-a-Bubble-Snake-Maker
THE WHITE RABBIT
Once the kids had their fun with the bubble snake, Alice told them that The White Rabbit needed
their help next, so they had to go find him to get the next task. We had another staff member in a
giant Easter Bunny head costume run this activity (you could use face paint and other costume
ideas). Once they got to their location the Rabbit said these next few things need to be done as
fast as possible because he is “late for a very important date!” Set up for the kids was a variety
of obstacle courses for them to complete (you can be creative with what you do, none of our
obstacles had nothing to do with the movie, it was just a way to bring the Rabbit into the theme).
THE MAD HATTER
Next, the Rabbit thanked the group of kids and said to them that The Mad Hatter (played by
another staff) now needs their help at his Tea Party. At this time Alice and the Rabbit join the tea
party. Ahead of time, the staff had made cupcakes and icing. The kids
were given the opportunity to decorate their cupcake however they
would like and of course eat it as well. The Tea Party was set up in a
room that I had decorated earlier in the day. I had set up streamers,
made a Happy Un-Birthday sign, and the previous night, I had other
staff help me blow up a ton of balloons, which were scattered all over
the floors. We had music playing so the kids could just spend some
time together and enjoy their cupcakes.
Up next we decided to play a game with the kids, we also had to figure
out what to do with all the balloons; so we tied a piece of string on each
balloon and attached one balloon to an ankle of each kid and when
we said go they had to go around to everyone else with a balloon and
try to stomp on the balloons and pop them, the last camper with an
unpopped balloon won.
LAKE OF TEARS
At the end of the game, we took the kids to the lake and explained
that we were going to go for a swim in the lake of tears (Alice in
Wonderland). At this point we told the kids to just go have fun in the
water and swim around, but you could definitely come up with some
Alice in Wonderland water activities.
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PANDEMIC - CAMP WIDE GAME
In creating Pandemic! my goal was to create a game that was exciting, fast-paced, and competitive
without giving campers the ability to chase each other or cheat and cause more animosity than
needed. Instead of groups playing against each other, campers play one team against the will
of the game!
Pandemic! (based loosely off the board game) was my attempt at simplifying the idea of everyone
vs. the game. In the end it turned into a glorified, and a little-complicated, themed item hunt
with a reason to run around. (Rules below)
Pandemic! required some decisions to be made on the fly by some of the staff leading the game
to ensure things stayed fun, fresh, and ended at the right time.
All the campers understood Pandemic! and enjoyed it a lot. The thing that made these games go
as smoothly as they did was that I knew exactly what I wanted the game to look like and I gave
specific instructions to counselors on what their goals were. Each game also accomplished what
I hoped for in the fact that even if some campers didnt like some parts of the game, they werent
upset AT anyone about it. Since everyone was on the same team, we all win or lose together.
However, we always win.
In Pandemic! Campers are now the worlds leading scientists from all over and all different
fields of deadly disease research. An outbreak of 4 highly contagious diseases threatens the
safety of the world and its our job here at the Center for Disease Control (CDC) to find a vaccine
and cure each of the diseases. Each disease is represented by a certain color (ex. Blue disease,
green disease, etc).
The way campers research and find these vaccines is by physically searching the camp for
syringes. Dont worry, they are just pieces of colored paper with clipart on them. These syringes
are folded or crumpled and hidden behind cracked bark in trees, in the middle of an open field
mostly covered by grass and rocks, under picnic table legs, and anywhere that would be very
hard to find. After all 4 syringes are found in a color, the corresponding disease has been cured!
After EACH syringe has been found and brought to the CDC, enough research has been done
to release a vaccine for that color! The vaccines are given to each camper with a symbol drawn
in marker on the back of the hand. All they need to do is show up at the CDC and ask to be
vaccinated!
What do they do with these vaccinations? Ward
off the diseases of course! Three counselors, each
dressed in the color of a disease are now viruses.
If a camper is tagged by a virus, they must show
symptoms of the disease. Symptoms are decided
before-hand so everyone knows, for example, that
if they are tagged by the blue virus they must now
keep their ankles together. Or, for example, if they
are tagged by the green virus they must keep their
hands above their head. And if they are tagged by
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both, they must keep their ankles together AND their hands up in the air.
They may be healed by either of a couple of medics or anti-viruses or Tylenol running around
(counselors dressed in white). When they are tagged by the medic, they can be healed but often
get a “side effect” of the medicine that wears off soon enough. These side effects are decided
on the fly by the medic. Examples are “hug a tree and yell I love you nature!’” or “run and tell
Counselor Bob that his guitar playing is Tee-Rific!” We also heal from the CDC. If a camper has
a vaccine, however, they do not need to display any side effects from being tagged by a virus.
Every once in a while, the bell will ring and the viruses will mutate. At that point, campers need
a better version of the vaccine. For the first syringe that is found in a color, campers get a vaccine
that looks like a line on their hand / The Second syringe gets everyone another line, making an
X. Thirdly, they get a circle around the x. And when the virus is completely cured, we will fill
in the circle. Before the viruses mutate, they can be stopped with a single line /. After the virus
mutate once, campers need an X to stop the virus and so on.
For the first three quarters of the game, only 3 of the 4 viruses are out running around. The
campers know that the black virus will come eventually and when it does symptoms are harsh
(keep both hands on feet). They also know that the black virus needs all 4 syringes before a
single vaccine can be made. When everyone needs a big burst of energy late game, the black
virus busts out and tags like mad! This game require us to hide VERY WELL and then give hints
if syringes werent found right away. This allowed us to control the timeline of the game.
SMORE BAKE-OFF
A big hit for us this summer was our Smore recipe
bake-off. We divided the camp into groups of ten
supervised by 2 staff members per group. Each
group brainstormed smores recipes and decided
on one at the beginning of the week and turned in
a supply list.
On the evening of the event, we assigned them each
a cooking space (one of our kitchens or campfire
circles) and a time limit to gather supplies, cook,
present, and clean up. The groups then presented
their recipe to the whole camp and the senior staff
were the judges.
We had smores pudding pies, smores candy apples, smore made to look like a campsite
complete with an oreo toilet and pretzel stick/mini marshmallow plunger, smores pancakes,
among others. The winning recipe earned an extra turn tubing on the ski boat the next day.
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SKILLS NIGHT
Every weeknight at our 80-camper, 4-week overnight co-ed Jewish camp we have an evening
program. I decided to do a “Skills Night” program where the kids would learn a new skill. From
there, I turned it over to a group of counselors to plan the details of the program and execute it.
In the beginning, they were not happy to be planning this program, complaining that “it wont
be fun”. I insisted that people like learning new things. In the end, I was proven right. Kids loved
it, and we had some great pictures for the parents.
This is what the counselors came up with:
The kids are not separated by gender, but are separated by age. 7 year-olds should learn different
skills than 15 year-olds.
• The youngest group (7-10 years old) learned how to properly make a bed and how to
follow a recipe to make brownies.
• Our 11-12 year olds learned how to sew (we needed more staff supervision for this
one to help individuals) at various levels.
• 13-14 year olds learned how to build a fire and tie ties.
• Our 15 year olds (CITs) learned how to change a tire and would have done so if the
tire iron that came with the rental van had been better. Instead, they learned that you
should buy your own tools. They did learn how to find the tools according to the
owners manual, where to place and how to use a jack, and how long to drive on the
“donut”.
The kids ended up having a lot of fun this night and this is a program I plan on repeating every
summer, although varying the skills so the returning campers dont do the same thing twice.
This ended up being the Evening Program that I was most proud of.
HARRY POTTER BREAKFAST
For one of our special event days at camp, we transform our community center into the Great
Hall of Hogwarts and provide the campers with breakfast for lunch. We encourage the campers
to dress up as their favorite character from the series and we select staff members to be certain
characters such as Harry Potter or Ron Weasley, who will roam around quoting lines from the
books and casting spells. The kids love the food, the decorations and the subsequent fantasy
themed activities they get to do that day.
The following were some of our decorating ideas:
• Arrange the tables into four rows to each represent a House and assign the campers to
different Houses via a Sorting Hat as they enter the room.
• Create each House banner to hang up
• Have a potions table where kids can taste some of the concoctions or create their own (use
old jars or different shapes and create labels for them)
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• Create the Whomping Willow out of brown packaging paper going up the wall (we even
placed the Weasleys car in one of the branches)
• Spread out a camp themed “Daily Prophet” on the tables as well as other activity pages
such as crossword puzzles for the kids to read/do during lunch
• Hang floating candles from the ceiling using fishing wire
Lastly, we projected one of the Harry Potter movies on the wall. We played the score from a CD
instead of the actual sounds from the movie since we have younger campers and didnt want
them to get frightened from any loud scenes.
ROTATION CELEBRATION
We are a day camp with about 40 staff members for about 235 campers. Staff are usually hired to
work with a specific age group and stick with them all summer. However, this year, we decided
to rotate our staff around every 2-3 weeks so they had the opportunity to work with all ages and
three different Program Directors.
At first, returning staff were a little reluctant and new staff didnt know better. After the first
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rotation, everyone LOVED the move. They got to know all the staff better, some realized they
enjoyed a different age group more than they thought, and they learned that not all camp
program directors are created equal.
To celebrate each rotation, we held a “Rotation Celebration.” We held a social event in town
(optional of course) that counselors could attend and get to know their new rotation group or
spend time with their old one. We went out to eat at a Taco place, had a pool party at a staffs
house, went for frozen yogurt and did a bowling night. I have to say our staff was closer than
ever and it made the summer not feel as long, since they moved around.
COLOR OLYMPIC THEME WEEK
At our day camp we have different themes each week.
On the last week of camp, which coincided with the
Olympics, our theme was The Color Olympics.
Each group of campers picked a color to be their team
color and a name for their team. Each team was given
a large banner size piece of white paper on which they
designed their own banner using their team name and
colored markers to represent their team color. We had
a contest to see who had the best banner. The winning
team received candy as their prize and was given the
“Olympic Trophy” to have for the day. In the basement
of our Recreation Center we found an old centerpiece that had an Olympic theme and looked
like a trophy. It was made from Styrofoam and colored paper. It had the Olympic rings on it, the
Olympic Flame and American Flags all over the base.
Our crafts for the week included coloring your own Frisbee and beach ball. Later in the week we
used these items in some of our “Olympic” games.
On Thursday we asked the campers to dress up in their team colors using a certain sport or sport
team theme if they wished. We took a picture of the whole camp dressed up in their colors and
the campers we able to take the picture home with them the last day of camp. Again, we had a
contest for the team that was the best dressed. We gave small prizes to the group that was voted
the best.
AMAZING RACE AT CAMP
Our best and most popular theme day every year is the Amazing Race. We base the whole day
on the reality show. We do this instead of colour war because I dont like the whole “war” word.
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We split the campers into two teams...each bunk with the counsellors are in 2 teams. No one gets
a schedule. Counsellors must participate.
They race to the “airport” for their first clue which takes them to a “country”. Once at the country
they have challenges they must complete including roadblocks and detours. The challenges we
come up with are related to the country they are in.
They receive points throughout the day and can only get their next clue once the counsellors
compete in an activity against each other, too. So the
children do the challenge and then the counsellors
compete in something as well. The children love seeing
their counsellors get so involved.
There is so much, spirit, fun and of course messiness in
this day of competition. It takes a while to coordinate
all the clues so bunks dont overlap, and they have to
stop at the airport for tickets after each country.
ADVENTURE CHALLENGE
We started an “adventure challenge” a couple of summers ago, and it has been going really well.
Its a decathlon-type event, using a lot of our outdoor adventure facilities, such as rock climbing,
archery, riflery, biking, swimming, boating, etc.
The campers sign up in pairs, and run it like a relay, choosing which of them will compete in
each event. It takes about 2 hours, we run about 4 heats of 5 teams each, and we run it during
youth camp. We have a big trophy that the winners get their names engraved on, and we display
it throughout the summer, even in the younger weeks, to inspire campers to want to come back
and participate in youth camp.
MIDNIGHT MADNESS
A couple of times throughout the summer, we wake up the campers at midnight, and have a
huge bonfire, and snacks, music and dancing, and games and things. Its a lot of work, but a lot
of fun.
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HOUSE POINTS
One of the things we did new this year, was offer House Points (we had a Harry Potter Theme).
Units earned points based on participation in activities, for displaying Girl Scout values and
behavior, and helping out and various things.
The unit leaders, program facilitators, and other Camp staff had authority to give points. At the
end of camp, we tallied the points and awarded a Camp Trophy to the winning unit during the
Parent Program.
We are going to have a banner made that we will update each year and will include the winner
of the Trophy each year, so campers can look back and see when they won.
We found that campers were more engaged, more helpful, and more willing to find things to
do to earn points. We did find we needed to address with some of the unit leaders that this was
meant to be fun. Some unit leaders were right on top of points, others not so much, so when
one unit seemed to have A LOT more points than the others, there was some discouragement.
We stressed to the unit leaders, and campers, that they still had the opportunity to earn points,
allowed them to evaluate the previous day when they were less on top of the points and submit
points, and that ultimately, everyone is a winner, if they participated and had fun.
The biggest part of this was getting the Unit Leaders and Older Girl Caddies to remain positive
about it. If they get discouraged or grumbling about it being unfair then the campers will pick
that up too, and it would not work as well.
We had some negative point activities, like being late to flag ceremony, or a program activity.
Things went so well, that we started flag ceremony 5 minutes EARLY on the last day. And we
were cleaned up from camp and heading home within 90 minutes (instead of 3 or more hours)
because so many campers offered to help out during the kaper time on the last day.
We had special paper that points were awarded on...to make sure that all points were official.
And the sheets needed to say, Who awarded the Points, Which Unit they were for, and What the
points were for.
Our points scheme: Points Who can Issue
Display GS Behavior 10 pts. Any Volunteer
Pick up litter (no tearing) 1 pt per piece Any volunteer
Minimal waste at meals 1 pt per person Unit Leader/Caddie
(this encourages taking only what you will eat)
Late to Activity -10 pts Activity Leader
Late to flag ceremony -50 pts Director
Participation in Activity up to 20 pts Activity Leader
Special Services to camp varies Any volunteer
Daily Prophet submission 10 pts Editor (camp newsletter)
Scavenger Hunt/Hike 1 pt per item found Activity or Unit leader
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I got so much good feedback from the volunteers about how this
encouraged good behavior and good participation that we have
decided that this will continue to be a traditional thing at camp.
One of the things we did new this year, was offer House Points (we had a Harry Potter Theme).
We used a Whiteboard calendar turned sideways, marked the 5
columns with each Unit Color (we had 5 units) and then marked with
colored whiteboard markers each day the points that were earned.
The unit leaders, program facilitators, and other Camp staff had authority to give points. At the
This was kept near the Flag Pole so units could check on their progress
each day. We asked the Unit Leaders to turn in the days points during
check out, and tallied overnight.
On the last day, we had a last call just before the closing ceremony, and announced the winner.
Ultimately, all units were within 100 points of each other so it was a pretty close race, and those
We found that campers were more engaged, more helpful, and more willing to find things to last minute points helped to make the difference.
do to earn points. We did find we needed to address with some of the unit leaders that this was
RED CARPET EVENT
For the end of summer we did a “Red Carpet” event. This
The biggest part of this was getting the Unit Leaders and Older Girl Caddies to remain positive was a Talent Showcase for our summer campers to share their
talents. We had it on a Friday night and invited all the parents,
it also doubled as a Fund Raiser for our new playground.
We had some negative point activities, like being late to flag ceremony, or a program activity. The show was Hollywood Theme and everyone dressed for
Things went so well, that we started flag ceremony 5 minutes EARLY on the last day. And we the red carpet. It was a huge success! We raised $600.00 in 2
hours. :-)
because so many campers offered to help out during the kaper time on the last day.
A few things we did included:
We had special paper that points were awarded on...to make sure that all points were official. • the walk of fame (childrens handprints all laminat-
ed together to create a side walk look)
• having our preschoolers do art work that we mat-
ted ourselves and put on display
• sold buttons of the kids with pictures we took
during the summer
• made a summer camp DVD.
Pick up litter (no tearing) 1 pt per piece Any volunteer
The parents enjoyed it so much that I have been ask to do this
at the end of every summer! Here are some pictures.
Late to flag ceremony -50 pts Director
Daily Prophet submission 10 pts Editor (camp newsletter)
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SAFARI HUNT
This is a themed counselor hunt. Take 20 staff members and have them dressed/painted as
different animals. If you want to add a point element, attach a point value to each “animal”
based on their characteristics (speed, camouflage, ferocity, etc.). The counselors hide around
camp and the campers are sent out to find them.
THEMED MEALS
Themed meals - we did a lot of themed meals this summer, and they are always really popular.
Here are some of the favorites.
STOP AND GO MEAL
The camp director and assistant camp director have a whistle, and the meal starts. Every time
the whistle is blown, everyone has to stop what they are doing, and be completely still and not
talk. When the whistle blows again, they are allowed to move/talk.
If anyone moves/talks/laughs in between the whistle blowing when everyone is supposed to be
still, they start to loose items. First, campers will loose their forks, and then knifes, spoons, left
arm, right arm (so they start to eat with their faces) and then bench, so they start to eat standing
up using faces (only loose one thing at a time). The campers really enjoyed this, and the more
times the whistle is blown the better.
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SHIPWRECKED MEAL
The silverware is taken away from the table, and instead everyone is given just one utensil to
eat the whole meal with. However, utensils are items like spatulas, large mixing spoons, ladles,
large forks etc, anything but the conventional fork, knife and spoon. They have to use this utensil
no matter what the food is, and they only get one utensil.
Before this meal starts, it is usually announced that the camp has been shipwrecked on an island,
so we only have strange items to eat with. It is also really funny to see the kids and staff eat a
chicken breast with a ladle.
T-REX MEAL
This meal was made up by a camper. Everyone has to move their arms into the side of their
bodies, just under the shoulders to give themselves small T-Rex arms. Im not to sure how to
describe this, but pretend your arms are imitating a T-Rex dinosaur. Everyone has to eat the
whole meal keeping their arms like this, so everyone has to bend over to cut their food, pick up
their water, etc.
THE AVENGERS EVENING ACTIVITY
One of the most popular evening activities we had this year was an avengers theme.
SET UP
All the campers were brought together, and split into groups of ten and of mixed ages . One staff
member was assigned to each group to supervise them.
Prior to the campers being grouped, we had a staff member dress up as each Avenger superhero
(Captain America, Thor, the Hulk, Black Widow, Iron Man and Hawkeye). The superheroes all
hid around the camp within a certain boundary.
Also hidden around the camp, was something each superhero needed. For example, Captain
Americas shields were hidden, Hawkeyes arrows, Thors hammers (the kids were told they
were able to pick them up), the Hulks gamma bombs, Black Widows toy guns, and Iron Mans
lights to replace the ones in his suit (we used flashlights). They were hidden away from the
superheros. So, for example, Thor was hiding by the arts and crafts building and his hammers
were beside the dining hall.
Every other staff member was dressed up as an alien, and were hiding all over the camp activity
boundary.
THE ACTIVITY
All the campers were gathered and grouped, and told by the program director that they were in
the middle of a crises, that Loki and his aliens were wanting to take over the camp, and that the
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campers had to find the Avengers and bring them together to fight the aliens, as they were the
only ones who could stop the take over.
Each group were given a map of the boundary and a pen, and had to set of to find they Avengers.
When they found a hero, they explained the situation, and the hero would reply along the lines
that they would love to help, but they need their ______ (whatever item it is they have hidden).
The campers would then have to find the item and bring it back to the superhero, who would
then agree to help, and sign the back of their map.
When the campers ran into aliens, the aliens would take the superheros item from the campers,
and tell them they could only get it back if they sing a song. answer a riddle/do a dance etc. The
aliens could decided if they would give it back or not, and they would take how much time
was left in the game in consideration (if there was a lot of time left, and the campers had most
of the superheros signatures they would keep the item, if they had hardly any superheroes
signatures they would give it back straight away).
The campers had an hour and a half to do this, and they had to stay with their group at all
times - no group separation. When the activity ended, all the groups gathered in the center
of camp, and the program director would ask who found what superhero. Meanwhile, all the
superheroes gathered beside the campers, and the aliens hid around the corner.
Once all the superheroes were questioned and it turned out we had all of them, it was announced
that mosey wood would be safe if there was an attack. At that moment, all the aliens ran around
the corner towards the Avengers, and the Avengers chased them away. The whole camp cheered
because they helped get rid of the aliens, and we knew the camp was safe!
HOLIDAZE CELEBRATIONS
The best thing we did in our summer day camp that was voted top activity was actually a theme
week, “Holidaze Celebrations”. Each day had a different theme and the activity pertained to
that theme.
MONDAY
We divided the kids into four groups, each group was assigned a holiday to decorate for. We
had Christmas decorations mixed in with Halloween and Easter mixed in with Valentines Day.
TUESDAY
ValenEaster Day Hunt It was girls against boys, girls were Bunnies and boys were Cupids.
Staff hid paper hearts filled with valentine candy and plastic eggs filled with Easter candy.
Bunnies had to find the eggs and Cupids had to find the hearts. Whoever found the most in a
given amount of time, won the game. The candy was divided evenly among groups.
WEDNESDAY
Christmas in July We had a snowball fight with crumpled up newspaper, sang Christmas carols,
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played “Pass the Parcel” game. (We wrapped Christmas trinkets and candy between layers of
wrapping paper and on the wrapping paper was sticky note with an instruction to perform
something funny, - do jumping jacks while humming Jingle Bells. The parcel was passed around
the circle as music played. When the music stopped the person holding the parcel unwrapped a
layer, performed the task and then got the prize.)
THURSDAY
Halloween Trick or Treating the kids made masks in the morning and then they went Trick or
Treating around to all the staff.
FRIDAY
Happy New Birthday Eve Dance Party the kids made party hats with the year they were born
on it. We had a special countdown at noon and everyone yelled the year they were born instead
of Happy New Year. We then had a dance party in the afternoon.
MAGGOT ART
Yes, you heard right. Get some maggots from a fly bait place (can order them online too). Squeeze
a little bit of tempera paint on a piece of paper (construction paper works well) and drop a few
maggots in the paint, then watch as they squirm around and paint you a picture! Photo below.
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WALKING TACOS
I get a lot of wonderful ideas off of my favorite website- Pinterest. This is one of them and the
staff and campers are still talking about it- And HOW EASY!
Walking Tacos- Best meal of the summer!
Give each kid an individual bag of Doritos or nachos- ask them to crush the chips inside
We then served buffet style the following:
• Taco meat (ground beef cooked with taco seasoning and water)
• Shredded lettuce
• Chopped tomatoes
• Shredded cheese
• Salsa
• Sour cream
We also prepared Spanish rice and had them served in plastic cups.
The kids created their own portable tacos! They loved them. Thank you Pinterest!
TARGET.COM
BEAD REWARD PROGRAM
I have to say one of the best things from camp this summer is that we started a bead reward
program and it was a huge success! I remember reading about it last year in the spring and really
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wanting to implement it last summer but we just didnt get it to come together in time, but this
year we put the finishing touches on it and it was great!!
We had several colored beads we used for different behavior rewards, as well as others that
matched specific activities, and more still that were specific to the theme of each week! We too
used the fuzzy beads during our “blast from the past” week, and the kids loved them!
Some of our other favorite beads were:
• Bucket charms-backyard week
• Jelly bean shaped-cooking week
• Animal charms-jungle week
• Sports beads, glow in the dark beads, uv beads and more!
To help make the idea work with our day camp program, we gave each child a chain necklace
and alphabet beads the first week, then they collected beads throughout the summer to add to
the collection. We had a peg board with tacks to hang their chains, and labeled them to keep
track each day. We took the time during morning announcements to recognize the campers,
and we rewarded them at the end of the summer with an ice cream social if they reached their
behavior bead totals (which they all did!)
Watching the kids look forward to reaching the beads, keeping track of their progress, helping
friends, they were really invested in it all summer and it was great!
THE HUNGRY GAMES
We had the HUNGRY GAMES, which were games based on food, of course.
• Our campers had to spell as many words as they could out of Spaghetti Os A-Zs
before the other team.
• They stomped grapes to see how much juice they could fill in a pitcher.
• They had to pick up marbles in spaghetti with their feet and put them in a container
without using their hands.
• They had to find food hidden in whipped cream without using their hands.
• and many more, ending with Smores and a hayride.
The kids had a blast, as well as our staff.
WISHBOAT CEREMONY
A wishboat ceremony is where the campers make a boat out of natural material, such as a piece
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of bark or lightweight wood whatever will float. We then put a small
birthday candle on the boat, and at the ceremony they make a wish and
set their boat out to float in the lake.
We did a ceremony specific to Girl Scouts but it can be used in any
organization. We also did it where they made boats in units because there
were too many campers for them to each do a boat.
IM A CELEBRITY...GET ME OUT OF HERE
Our camp was based around the Im a celebrity...get me out of here show.
We did food tasting, touch and feel, slime boxes etc as well as cooking food for themselves using
triangas.
Activities that were popular were orienteering and the assault course.
The slime boxes were simply boxes filled with
• soil and shells
• spaghetti and oil
• blamanche with plastic spiders
• an ice filled rubber glove that has had fingers chopped off
…anything really that will make the girls scream and reluctant to put their hands in the boxes.
We made it more difficult by adding an incentive to make sure they all felt the need to participate
- inside some of the boxes would be stars. Each star collected meant more food for the team!
As for the assault course, we led the girls to a wooded area, gave them some logs, sticks, string
and tarpaulin. Each patrol had to assemble their own obstacle and then everyone took a turn at
the completed assault course. Everyone had to vote which obstacle was the best.
OLD TIME OLYMPICS
The activities selected were badminton, marbles, jacks, and croquet. Jumprope was a big hit
with the crowd. Everyone attempted to do double-dutch.
Each person could rotate on their own and select their activity. Staff was on hand to participate
if a partner was needed. It was a fun time! Sno cones, popcorn and cotton candy were served.
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